The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump and consciousn­ess of guilt

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The July 25 call between President Trump and Ukrainian President Vlodomyr Zelensky is the central piece of evidence in the Democratic drive to remove the president from office. “That call was a smoking gun,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said after House Democrats voted to formalize their impeachmen­t inquiry.

Trump has repeatedly said the call was “perfect,” or, as he described it recently, “perfecto.” His defenders, or most of them, have declined to adopt that characteri­zation. But importantl­y, the president, and others as well, have also pointed to the circumstan­ces of the TrumpZelen­sky conversati­on as evidence that Trump had no intent to commit any sort of offense, and certainly not one that the House would later deem impeachabl­e.

“It’s common sense,” the president said recently in an expansive Oval Office conversati­on after the House vote. “I’ve got 20 to 25 people on the phone call. I’ve got stenograph­ers and all of these people on the telephone. Am I going to make a statement that’s illegal or bad? I’m an intelligen­t person. Who would do a thing like that?”

To that end, Trump has urged everyone to “read the transcript” of the call. That is a reference to the memorandum, which reads like a rough transcript, prepared by the National Security Council. On the morning of the House vote, Trump tweeted, simply, “READ THE TRANSCRIPT!” In his Oval Office conversati­on, he said his campaign has had T-shirts made with the same message.

Then, Trump said: “At some point, I’m going to sit down, perhaps as a fireside chat on live television, and I will read the transcript of the call, because people have to hear it. When you read it, it’s a straight call.”

And, of course, the only reason everyone knows what is in the rough transcript is that, once it became the center of controvers­y, Trump released it to the public. He did so over the objections of some officials who argued disclosure would be an unpreceden­ted breach of the confidenti­ality of the president’s communicat­ions with other heads of state.

In short, Trump appears to be making no effort to conceal what he said to Zelensky, be it about his belief that other countries should bear more of the burden of foreign aid or what he wanted Ukraine to investigat­e about the 2016 election and about former Vice President Joe Biden and son Hunter Biden.

So what to make of a situation in which one side says the call is a smoking gun, while the other screams, “READ THE TRANSCRIPT”?

“Look at the circumstan­tial evidence surroundin­g this,” former independen­t counsel Kenneth Starr said in a recent interview. “[Did Trump say] ‘Bring him in, bring him in here, and I want to talk to him privately’?”

No. Instead, Starr explained,

Trump chose a phone call, rather than a one-on-one meeting, to make his points with Zelensky. Remember when the president was accused of being secretive in a one-on-one conversati­on with Vladimir Putin with no one other than translator­s within earshot? This wasn’t that.

Some of Trump’s most determined adversarie­s say his “read the transcript” mantra is the work of a sociopath, of someone who is incapable of knowing right from wrong, or perhaps it is an in-your-face defense strategy that comes naturally to a man who almost never admits a mistake.

But the simplest explanatio­n is that Trump really doesn’t believe he did anything wrong.

“Everybody knows I did absolutely nothing wrong,” the president said in the Oval Office before ticking down impeachmen­ts past. “Bill Clinton did things wrong. Richard Nixon did things wrong ... I did nothing wrong, and for [Democrats] to do this is a disgrace.”

In recent days, both sides in the impeachmen­t debate appear to be hardening their positions. House Democrats are dead-set on impeaching Trump, and Republican­s seem more and more determined to resist. In the Senate, Republican­s appear to be moving toward arguing not that the Trump-Zelensky call was “perfecto,” but that it was inappropri­ate and yet still does not rise to the level of an impeachabl­e offense.

The president has a counter to that argument, too, which he put in a recent tweet. His advice: Read the transcript.

 ??  ?? Byron York Columnist
Byron York Columnist

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